Category Archives: thunderblogs

Neolithic Man and the Electric Universe By Brian Cairns Just east of ancient Roman seaport Ostia is a raised dendritic pattern distinguished from the surrounding terrain by its luxurious vegetation. The ridges are so precisely defined, with so little erosion, that one can rightly suspect recent formation from a cosmic …

Bioelectric Exploration of Acupoints By Alexander Fournier In 1976, a research team funded by the National Institute of Health comprised of Robert Becker, Maria Reichmanis, Andrew Marino, and Joseph Spadaro published a groundbreaking series of bioelectrical experiments. Becker had been asked by an army colonel from the Surgeon General’s Office …

Looking for Lightning By Andrew Hall One thing you can say about lightning – it’s not very subtle. Geomorphologist Stephan Grab and Geologist Jasper Knight at Johannesburg’s University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa have studied the Drakensberg Peaks in Lesotho and discovered the primary force shaping them is lightning. …

Evolution and Earth’s Electric Field By Alexander Fournier Biorhythms of the Earth and its Offspring In 1982 experienced anthropologist and pharmacologist Francis Ivanhoe published the first of multiple studies in which he would catalog an important discovery for evolutionary science. Surveying all known Paleolithic human skulls, he witnessed a correlation …

Comments on Michael Shermer’s Article in Sci. American By Dr. Donald Scott All authors published in Scientific American should be rigidly bound by the editors to stay within the constraints of science. In science any and all claims must have clear bases in fact. In the event editors allow baseless …

Pay no attention to the Black Hole hiding in there. Eleven Years Looking For Nada By Andrew Hall Nada is Spanish for nothing. It’s also the number of gravitational waves found after an eleven year study, as reported by Australia’s Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) and the International Centre …

Electrical Geology of Pluto and Comet 67PBy Stuart Talbott

It seems that NASA’s New Horizons mission to the dwarf planet Pluto continues to provide planetary scientists with new challenges and deepening mysteries. At the top of the list are the recent images of the planet’s surface revealing features that look like sand dunes. That’s a problem because Pluto’s atmosphere is far too thin and weak at present to generate the necessary winds for dune creation.

New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern said of the discovery, “We have detected vast fields of features that look like dunes. Now we are being careful to say they look like dunes. They may or may not actually be dunes. Their origin is under debate.”

New Horizons Flyby, Photo Credit: ESA

The New Horizons team is now suggesting that Pluto’s atmosphere must have once been dense enough to produce dunes or dune-like features—if only some exotic force could be called upon to drive the necessary winds.

Improbable dunes are not new to planetary science. In recent years we’ve noted “impossible” dunes on bodies throughout the solar system, including the planet Mars. In previous Space News episodes, we have even reported on the discovery of remarkable sand dunes on the comet 67P—remarkable because under standard assumptions no comet should possess the atmosphere necessary to create dunes. Until very recently, comet science never ventured into speculations about winds on a comet’s surface.

Yet images of a giant rock named Cheops on comet 67P revealed what appeared to be wind steaks trailing away from the rock. Not only that, Rosetta scientists subsequently found more than a dozen similarly “wind-streaked” rocks or boulders. Initially, mission scientists speculated that the comet’s jets must have somehow created the improbable wind, a concept they ratified formally by giving the imagined process a name. They called it “localized gas-driven transport.”

More recently, comet investigators have proposed an even more extreme process on the comet similar to saltation in Earth geology. That process would not just require an atmosphere, but turbulent winds acting on the comet’s surface with energies beyond anything previously imagined.

Comet 67P, Photo Credit: ESA

Given the scale of the mysteries, we can only urge NASA and the European Space Agency to open discussion of an electric comet hypothesis. For theorists of the Electric Universe and the Thunderbolts Project, the electric behavior of comets is simply undeniable. In the case of Comet 67P, the question is logically posed by the greatly enhanced electron fluxes and densities close to the comet nucleus. But many additional layers of evidence have accumulated as well, up to the point of a virtual certainty: a comet’s electrical activity is fundamental to the very nature of these bodies. Only electric fields and consequent electric discharge will explain the filamentary comet jets. Indeed, experiments with electric fields on dusty surfaces, including demonstrations by Billy Yelverton, have reproduced numerous cometary surface features, including all manner of sand dunes. The freshly coined language of “localized gas-driven transport” becomes unnecessary the moment one considers the demonstrable attributes of electric discharge activity — not just the ability to transport dust but to configure dust into all of the defining surface features of 67P.

In last February’s Space News, The Impossible Dunes of Comet 67P, we registered a prediction— that dramatic and seemingly inexplicable changes on the surface of 67P would be imaged by the Rosetta Spacecraft.

ESA scientists have recently released images taken over a period of 6 weeks, beginning in late May. The images reveal erosional features up to hundreds of meters in diameter forming at a rate exponentially faster than predicted by standard comet theory. As one mission scientist recently stated, “These spectacular changes are proceeding extremely rapidly, with the rims of the features expanding by a few tens of centimeters per hour. This highlights the complexity of the physical processes involved.”

The ESA website acknowledges that the sublimation of conjectured subsurface ices could not begin to explain the observed phenomena. They state of the features, “The rapid rate of expansion is unexpected, however: models of sunlight-driven sublimation would predict erosion rates of just a few centimeters per hour, and thus the scientists believe that additional mechanisms are required to explain the observations.”

Scientists didn’t convincingly explain the same edge-recession features on comet Tempel 1 [“..depressions that have merged together over time, also as a result of erosion caused by volatile substances evaporating from the comet.”]. It is a characteristic effect of Electric Discharge Machining.

The greatest stumbling block for understanding Pluto is the fabricated story of its formation and billions of years of assumed history. Its atmosphere and surface features fit better with recent capture, perhaps as part of the Saturnian entourage, given Pluto’s substantial nitrogen atmosphere. Alternatively, Pluto’s axial tilt suggests a possible former association with Uranus. This is the path for future investigation — looking for ‘family resemblances; not force-fitting data into an entirely fictional history of the solar system.

Message to NASA scientists: before the opportunity is forgotten, please consider the receding margins of dust or silicate material around the pathway of an electric current, as seen in this experiment by Billy Yelverton.

Electrical forces can readily produce dunes on comets. But what about the dunes of Pluto? The planet moves on an elliptical orbit through a weak heliospheric electric field. That fact alone makes the question well worth asking—whether the surface of the dwarf planet, immersed in electric fields and buffeted by ionic winds, is giving us a compelling demonstration of electrical activity similar to that of comets. The fact that Pluto is now known to exhibit a comet-like tail is just another reason to ask the question.

Stuart Talbott is the producer of Space News from the Electric Universe, a regular feature of The Thunderbolts Project YouTube Channel since 2012. Electric Geology of Pluto and Comet 67P was posted Sept 28, 2015.

Electric Biology and Building Solidarity By Alexander Fournier Each field of scientific study, from the science of electrochemistry to the science of human group behavior, is ideally built upon a history of illuminating experiments. This is not always the case to be sure, as some fields become driven by barely-tested …

The Shape of the Universe By Andrew Hall Breaking news for EU Theory – cosmic scale structure largest yet detected in the Universe. Presents quandary for ‘Big Bangers.’ The result of a gamma ray burst detection survey is shown in the featured image from JPL. Each blue dot represents a …

Predictions for Comet Science After Rosetta By Stuart Talbott and Dave Talbott The Rosetta mission to Comet 67P is still in its early stages, but the remarkable discoveries have been coming for some time. Here is a quick review of key findings so far: Like other comet surfaces, 67P is blacker than charcoal, …